Gamalama (also called Peak of Ternate) is a stratovolcano with multiple
craters and crater lakes. Gamalama forms an island about 11 km in diameter.
Small to moderate explosive eruptions are frequent with 70 known eruptions
since 1538. Several eruptions have produced lava flows or mudflows. Six
eruptions have caused fatalities. Glowing ash and rock killed 30-40 slaves
during the 1771-1772 eruption. In 1773, several people drowned as
overloaded boats fled from an eruption. During a maar-forming eruption in
1775, about 1,300 people were killed by pyroclastic flows or surges. In
1838, four sulfur collectors died in the crater. In 1871, a block fell on
and killed a man. Five people were killed and five injured at Gamalama in
1962. The most recent eruption was in 1993.

Since 1538, Gamalama has erupted explosively at least 57 times. The most
recent eruption was in 1993 and lasted about 2 weeks. The eruptions are
commonly moderate to moderately large (VEI=2-3).
Six eruptions have caused fatalities. In 1775, a maar
-forming eruption on the north coast of the volcano produced a base surge that killed 141 people. In all, about 1,300 people died in
this eruption. Gamalama erupted in October of 1994, creating a 1,000 foot (300 m)
tall plume and depositing a thin layer of ash on nearby villages. No one was injured.
Photo by Jack Lockwood, U.S. Geological Survey, October 31, 1982.

Laguna maar on Gamalama. View is to the south.Photo by Jack Lockwood, U.S. Geological Survey, November 5, 1982.

Mt. Gamalama rising above the city of Ternate. A small eruption plume is visible,
causing hazy conditions in the area. View from the south. December 1994 - Photograph
copyrighted and provided by Dan Olgerg, Senior Geologist, PT Nusa Halmhera Minerals.

Smoking Mt. Gamalama as viewed from the east side of Ternate Island at the airport.
The edges of the two old craters can be seen as small lumps to the left of the active cone.
April 1996 - Photograph copyrighted and provided by Dan Olberg, Senior Geologist,
PT Nusa Halmhera Minerals.

Mt. Gamalama on Ternate Island as viewed from the dormant summit crater of neighboring Tidore
(Mt. Kiemtabu). The small volcanoic island between Tidore and Ternate is Maitara. July 1997 -
Photograph copyrighted and provided by Dan Olberg, Senior Geologist, PT Nusa Halmhera Minerals.

The cloud capped summit of Mt. Gamalama on Ternate Island. A relatively recent lava flow
can be seen fingering into the sea on the north side of the island. May 2000 -
Photograph copyrighted and provided by Bruce Gemmell, University of Tasmania.